2009 in association football

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The following are the association football events of the year 2009 throughout the world.

News[]

General[]

  • Major League Soccer (United States/Canada) expands to 15 teams with the launch of Seattle Sounders FC.
  • Women's Professional Soccer, the successor to the defunct Women's United Soccer Association in the US, launched in March with 7 teams.
  • During the 2009–10 A-League season, the FFA, the governing body of the sport in Australia, will expand the 8 team A-League to include 10 teams, with the addition of clubs from North Queensland and the Gold Coast.

January[]

  • 1 – Gamba Osaka win the 88th edition of the Emperor's Cup and qualify for the 2009 AFC Champions League.
  • 11 – Club Deportivo Guadalajara win the InterLiga 2009, Guadalajara and runners-up C.F. Pachuca both qualify for the Copa Libertadores.
  • 12 – The 2008 FIFA World Player of the Year ceremony took place in Zürich, Switzerland. Cristiano Ronaldo was awarded the men's prize and Marta won the women's prize for the third year in a row.
  • 13 – Uganda win their tenth CECAFA Cup, beating Kenya 1–0 in the final at the National Stadium, Kampala.
  • 17 – Oman win the 19th Arabian Gulf Cup, beating Saudi Arabia 6–5 on penalties.

February[]

  • 23 – K-League 2008 champions Suwon Samsung Bluewings defeat MLS representative Los Angeles Galaxy at the final game of Pan-Pacific Championship 2009 by penalty shootout after 1–1 game, winning the second champion title of Pan-Pacific Championship. J. League Cup 2008 winners Oita Trinita win the third place match against Chinese Super League 2008 champions Shandong Luneng Taishan by 2–1.
  • 28 – Melbourne Victory win the grand final of the 2008–09 A-League season.

March[]

  • 14 – In the Premier League, Liverpool beat Manchester United 4–1 at Old Trafford, completing a "double" against both Manchester United and Chelsea this season.

May[]

  • 2 - Barcelona beat Real Madrid 2–6 at Santiago Bernabeu Stadium.
  • 25 – Burnley beat Sheffield United 1–0 at Wembley Stadium in the second tier of English football's play-off final and are promoted to the top flight.
  • 27 - Barcelona beat Manchester United 2–0 at Stadio Olimpico in Rome, winning their 3rd Champions League title.

June[]

  • 6 – Japan, Australia, South Korea, and Netherlands are officially qualified for the 2010 FIFA World Cup.
  • 17 – North Korea is qualified for the 2010 FIFA World Cup.
  • 28 – Brazil beats the USA 3–2 at the final of the FIFA Confederations Cup 2009 in Johannesburg, South Africa, winning two FIFA Confederations Cup in a row.

July[]

  • 9 – Liga Deportiva Universitaria de Quito beats SC Internacional 4–0 on aggregate at the 2009 Recopa Sudamericana.
  • 26 – Players from the 1990 England and West Germany national teams are to replay their Italia '90 World Cup semi-final match in aid of charity, for the Sir Bobby Robson Trophy.
  • 28 – Former Ipswich, Newcastle, England and Barcelona manager Bobby Robson dies at age 76.

September[]

October[]

  • 27 - 3rd tier side Alcorcón beat 4-0 La Liga side Real Madrid in a Spanish cup match. This match was given the name Alcorconazo by the Spanish media and by Alcorcón fans.

November[]

  • 14 – New Zealand beats Bahrain 1–0 on aggregate at the AFC–OFC play-off. The All Whites book their first World Cup trip since 1982, while Bahrain lose for the second straight time in an inter-confederation play-off, having lost to Trinidad and Tobago in 2006.
  • 18 – Controversies over Republic of Ireland vs France match, one of the 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification – UEFA Second Round play-offs, occur due to France's play-off-winning goal in connection with intentional handball by French captain Thierry Henry.
  • 18 – Uruguay beats Costa Rica 2–1 on aggregate at the CONCACAF–CONMEBOL play-off, making themselves the last of 32 countries qualifying for the 2010 FIFA World Cup.

December[]

  • 2 - Liga Deportiva Universitaria de Quito beats Fluminense FC 5–4 on aggregate at the 2009 Copa Sudamericana finals.
  • 4 – The final draw for 2010 FIFA World Cup is held in Cape Town, South Africa.
  • 19 – FC Barcelona beats Estudiantes de La Plata 2–1 in the final match of the 2009 FIFA Club World Cup.
  • 21 – The 2009 FIFA World Player of the Year awards are handed out in Zürich. The men's award goes to Lionel Messi of Argentina and FC Barcelona. The women's award goes to Marta of Brazil and the Los Angeles Sol, who becomes the first player of either sex to win the award four times (in her case, consecutively).

Events[]

Men's national teams[]

CAF[]

  • 31 December 2008 – 13 January 2009: 2008 CECAFA Cup in  Uganda
    • 1st place, gold medalist(s)  Uganda
    • 2nd place, silver medalist(s)  Kenya
    • 3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Tanzania
    • 4th  Burundi
  • 28 November–13 December: 2009 CECAFA Cup in  Kenya
    • 1st place, gold medalist(s)  Uganda
    • 2nd place, silver medalist(s)  Rwanda
    • 3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Zanzibar
    • 4th  Tanzania

AFC[]

CONCACAF[]

  • 3–26 July: 2009 CONCACAF Gold Cup in the  United States

FIFA[]

  • 14–28 June: FIFA Confederations Cup 2009 in  South Africa
  • 24 September – 16 October: 2009 FIFA U-20 World Cup in  Egypt
  • 24 October – 15 November: 2009 FIFA U-17 World Cup in  Nigeria
    • 1st place, gold medalist(s)   Switzerland
    • 2nd place, silver medalist(s)  Nigeria
    • 3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Spain
    • 4th  Colombia

Club football[]

Region Tournament Champion Title Last Honor
AFC (Asia) 2009 AFC Champions League South Korea Pohang Steelers 3rd 1997–98
2009 AFC Cup Kuwait Al Kuwait 1st N/A
2009 AFC President's Cup Tajikistan Regar-TadAZ 4th 2008
CAF (Africa) 2009 CAF Champions League Democratic Republic of the Congo TP Mazembe 3rd 1968
2009 CAF Confederation Cup Mali Stade Malien 1st N/A
2009 CAF Super Cup Egypt Al Ahly 4th 2007
CONCACAF
(North and Central America, Caribbean)
2008–09 CONCACAF Champions League Mexico Atlante 2nd 1983
2009 North American SuperLiga Mexico Tigres UANL 1st N/A
2009 CFU Club Championship Trinidad and Tobago W Connection 4th 2006
CONMEBOL (South America) 2009 Copa Libertadores Argentina Estudiantes 3rd 1970
2009 Copa Sudamericana Ecuador LDU Quito 1st N/A
2009 Recopa Sudamericana Ecuador LDU Quito 1st N/A
OFC (Oceania) 2008–09 OFC Champions League New Zealand Auckland City 3rd 2006
UEFA (Europe) 2008–09 UEFA Champions League Spain Barcelona 3rd 2005–06
2008–09 UEFA Cup Ukraine Shakhtar Donetsk 1st N/A
2009 UEFA Super Cup Spain Barcelona 1st N/A
FIFA (Worldwide) 2009 FIFA Club World Cup Spain Barcelona 1st N/A

Women[]

Region Tournament Champion Title Last honor
CONMEBOL (South America) 2009 Copa Libertadores Femenina Brazil Santos FC (women) 1st N/A
UEFA (Europe) 2008–09 UEFA Women's Cup Germany FCR 2001 Duisburg 1st N/A

National champions[]

AFC[]

  •  AustraliaMelbourne Victory
  •  BahamasMuharraq Club
  •  BangladeshAbahani Limited
  •  BhutanDruk Star
  •  Cambodiaa Corp
  •  ChinaBeijing Guoan
  •  Chinese TaipeiKaohsiung City Yaoti
  •  Guam – Quality Distributors
  •  Hong KongSouth China AA
  •  IndiaChurchill Brothers
  •  IndonesiaPersipura Jayapura
  •  IranEsteghlal
  •  IraqArbil FC
  •  JapanKashima Antlers
  •  JordanAl-Wahdat
  •  South KoreaJeonbuk Hyundai Motors
  •  KuwaitAl-Qadisiya Kuwait
  •  KyrgyzstanDordoi-Dynamo
  •  LebanonNejmeh
  •  MacauLam Pak
  •  MalaysiaSelangor FA
  •  OmanAl-Nahda
  •  PakistanWAPDA
  •  Palestine – Wadi Al-Nes
  •  QatarAl-Gharrafa
  •  Saudi ArabiaAl-Ittihad
  •  SingaporeSAFFC
  •  SyriaAl-Karamah
  •  TajikistanVakhsh Qurghonteppa
  •  ThailandMuang Thong United
  •  TurkmenistanHTTU Aşgabat
  •  United Arab EmiratesAl-Ahli
  •  UzbekistanBunyodkor
  •  VietnamĐà Nẵng

CAF[]

  •  AlgeriaES Sétif
  •  CameroonTiko United
  •  EgyptAl Ahly
  •  LibyaAl-Ittihad
  •  MoroccoRaja Casablanca
  •  NigeriaBayelsa United
  •  South AfricaSupersport United
  •  TunisiaEspérance Sportive de Tunis

CONCACAF[]

Note: "(A)" means Apertura champion; "(C)" mean Clausura champion.
Note: "(P)" designates the MLS Cup playoffs champion; "(L)" designates the MLS Supporters' Shield winner.

CONMEBOL[]

Note: "(A)" means Apertura champion; "(C)" mean Clausura champion.

OFC[]

  •  FijiLakota
  • French PolynesiaManu-Ura
  • New CaledoniaMagenta
  •  New ZealandAuckland City
  •  VanuatuTafea FC

UEFA[]

  • Albania AlbaniaTirana
  • Andorra AndorraSant Julià
  • Armenia ArmeniaPyunik
  • Austria AustriaRed Bull Salzburg
  • Azerbaijan AzerbaijanBaku
  • Belarus BelarusBATE Borisov
  • Belgium BelgiumStandard Liège
  • Bosnia and Herzegovina Bosnia and HerzegovinaZrinjski Mostar
  • Bulgaria BulgariaLevski Sofia
  • Croatia CroatiaDinamo Zagreb
  • Cyprus CyprusAPOEL
  • Czech Republic Czech RepublicSlavia Prague
  • Denmark DenmarkCopenhagen
  • England EnglandManchester United
  • Estonia EstoniaLevadia
  • Faroe Islands Faroe IslandsHB Tórshavn
  • Finland FinlandHJK Helsinki
  • France FranceBordeaux
  • Georgia (country) GeorgiaWIT Georgia
  • Germany GermanyWolfsburg
  • Greece GreeceOlympiacos
  • Hungary HungaryDebrecen
  • Iceland IcelandFH
  • Republic of Ireland Republic of IrelandBohemians
  • Israel IsraelMaccabi Haifa
  • Italy ItalyInternazionale
  • Kazakhstan KazakhstanFC Aktobe
  • Latvia LatviaFK Liepājas Metalurgs
  • Lithuania LithuaniaFK Ekranas
  • Luxembourg LuxembourgF91 Dudelange
  • North Macedonia MacedoniaMakedonija Gjorče Petrov
  • Malta MaltaHibernians
  • Moldova MoldovaSheriff Tiraspol
  • Montenegro MontenegroMogren
  • Netherlands NetherlandsAZ
  • Northern Ireland Northern IrelandGlentoran
  • Norway NorwayRosenborg
  • Poland PolandWisła Kraków
  • Portugal PortugalPorto
  • Romania RomaniaUnirea Urziceni
  • Russia RussiaRubin Kazan
  • San Marino San MarinoTre Fiori
  • Scotland ScotlandRangers
  • Serbia SerbiaPartizan
  • Slovakia SlovakiaSlovan Bratislava
  • Slovenia SloveniaMaribor
  • Spain SpainBarcelona
  • Sweden SwedenAIK
  • Switzerland SwitzerlandZürich
  • Turkey TurkeyBeşiktaş
  • Ukraine UkraineDynamo Kyiv
  • Wales WalesRhyl

Deaths[]

January[]

  • 2 January – Ian Greaves (76), English defender and manager
  • 2 January – Ryuzo Hiraki (77), Japanese defender and national team manager
  • 2 January – (58), Tunisian goalkeeper[citation needed]
  • 4 January – Lei Clijsters (52), Belgian defender and coach, father of Kim Clijsters
  • 4 January – Arvid Knutsen (80), Norwegian forward and coach
  • 5 January – Jimmy Rayner (73), English striker
  • 6 January – Shmuel Ben Dror (84), Israeli midfielder, scorer of the first ever goal of the Israel national football team
  • 6 January – Charlie Thomson (78), Scottish goalkeeper
  • 7 January – Alfie Conn, Sr. (82), Scottish forward
  • 8 January – Alberto Eliani (86), Italian defender
  • 9 January – (63), Italian/French defender[citation needed]
  • 10 January – Jack Wheeler (89), English goalkeeper
  • 12 January – Friaça, Brazilian forward, runner-up at the 1950 FIFA World Cup. (84)
  • 13 January – Tommy Casey (78), Northern Irish midfielder
  • 14 January – Tomi Jalo (50), Finnish midfielder
  • 16 January – Cláudio Milar (35), Uruguayan striker, traffic accident
  • 17 January – Tomislav Crnković (79), Croatian defender
  • 19 January – Joop Wille (88), Dutch goalkeeper
  • 20 January – Johnny Dixon (85), English striker
  • 21 January – Jaime Belmonte (74), Mexican midfielder, participated in the 1958 FIFA World Cup
  • 21 January – Vic Crowe (76), Welsh midfielder
  • 21 January – Peter Persidis (61), Austrian defender
  • 22 January – Clément Pinault (23), French defender, heart attack
  • 24 January – Fernando Cornejo (39), Chilean midfielder, cancer
  • 24 January – Karl Koller (79), Austrian midfielder
  • 26 January – Ivan Jensen (76), Danish midfielder
  • 27 January – Aubrey Powell (90), Welsh forward
  • 29 January – Willi Köchling (75), German defender
  • 29 January – Roy Saunders (78), English midfielder
  • 30 January – Pieter Van Den Bosch (71), Belgian midfielder, participated in the 1954 FIFA World Cup

February[]

  • 2 February – Paul Birch (46), English midfielder
  • 7 February – Joe Haverty (72), Irish midfielder
  • 8 February – (66), Finnish defender, Finnish Footballer of the Year in 1968
  • 9 February – Reg Davies (79), Welsh forward
  • 9 February – Neville Hamilton (48), English midfielder
  • 10 February – (88), Danish defender
  • 12 February – Giacomo Bulgarelli (68), Italian midfielder, participated in the 1962 FIFA World Cup, 1966 FIFA World Cup and UEFA Euro 1968
  • 13 February – Jerzy Hawrylewicz (50), Polish forward
  • 15 February – Don Leeson (73), English goalkeeper
  • 20 February – Július Nôta (37), Slovak goalkeeper, stabbing

March[]

  • 1 March – (73), French goalkeeper
  • 2 March – Andy Bowman (74), Scottish midfielder
  • 2 March – Carlos Sosa (89), Argentine defender
  • 3 March – Åke Lindman (81), Finnish defender
  • 3 March – (80), Mexican goalkeeper and national team coach
  • 4 March – Harry Parkes (89), English defender
  • 5 March – Valeri Broshin (46), Russian midfielder
  • 7 March – Jimmy Hernon (84), Scottish midfielder
  • 7 March – Edouard Oum Ndeki (32), Cameroonian midfielder, hepatitis
  • 7 March – Anton Shokh (49), Kazakhstani-Russian midfielder
  • 9 March – Eddie Lowe (83), English midfielder
  • 10 March – Jack Capper (77), Welsh defender
  • 12 March – Ferenc Szabó, (88) Hungarian footballer
  • 15 March – Jumadi Abdi, (36) Indonesian footballer
  • 16 March – Alan Suddick (64), English midfielder
  • 28 March – Hugh Kelly (85), Scottish defender
  • 29 March – Vladimir Fedotov (66), Russian striker
  • 31 March – Enea Masiero (75), Italian midfielder

April[]

  • 2 April – Víctor Hugo Ávalos (37), Paraguayan midfielder
  • 6 April – Gheorghe Ene (72), Romanian striker
  • 11 April – Jimmy Neighbour (58), English midfielder
  • 12 April – Mike Keen (69), English midfielder
  • 12 April – Louis Leysen (76), Belgian goalkeeper
  • 13 April – (65), Argentine midfielder, participated in the 1964 Summer Olympics
  • 19 April – Maurilio Prini (76), Italian midfielder
  • 19 April – Dicky Robinson (82), English defender
  • 20 April – Franco Rotella (42), Italian midfielder
  • 23 April – Lam Sheung Yee (74), Hong Kong defender
  • 25 April – (54), Bosnian defender

May[]

  • 1 May – Jokke Kangaskorpi (37), Finnish forward
  • 3 May – John Elsworthy (77), Welsh midfielder, member of the squad for the 1958 FIFA World Cup
  • 3 May – Tommy Fowler (84), English midfielder
  • 4 May – Bobby Campbell (86), Scottish winger
  • 9 May – Juan Gómez (84), Mexican defender, participated in the 1954 FIFA World Cup
  • 13 May – Norbert Eschmann (75), Swiss-French midfielder, member of the squad for the 1954 FIFA World Cup and 1962 FIFA World Cup
  • 14 May – Ken Hollyman, Welsh footballer (86)
  • 16 May – Peter Sampson, English footballer (81)
  • 19 May – Andrei Ivanov (42), Russian defender
  • 19 May – Knut Hammer Larsen, Norwegian footballer (38)
  • 20 May – Alan Kelly Sr., Irish footballer (72)
  • 21 May – Walter da Silva, Brazilian footballer (67)
  • 21 May – Anatoli Kirilov, Bulgarian footballer
  • 24 May – Youssef Elbai (30), French defender
  • 25 May – Billy Baxter (70), Scottish midfielder/defender
  • 27 May – Ammo Baba, Iraqi footballer (74)
  • 28 May – Ercole Rabitti, Italian footballer (87)
  • 30 May – Alexander Obregón, Colombian footballer (31)
  • 30 May – (81), Norwegian forward

June[]

  • 2 June – Rodrigo García Vizoso (100), Spanish goalkeeper and coach
  • 4 June – Lev Brovarskyi (60), Ukrainian midfielder
  • 6 June – Bobby Haarms (74), Dutch midfielder
  • 7 June – Willie Kilmarnock (87), Scottish footballer
  • 7 June – Gordon Lennon (26), Northern Irish defender, traffic accident
  • 8 June – Aage Rou Jensen (84), Danish striker
  • 10 June – Stelios Skevofilakas (69), Greek footballer
  • 11 June – Alan Philpott (66), English midfielder
  • 14 June – Abel Tador (24), Nigerian footballer
  • 17 June – Shacky Tauro (49, Zimbabwean footballer
  • 18 June – Mihai Mocanu (67), Romanian defender, participated in the 1970 FIFA World Cup
  • 20 June – (82), French midfielder and coach
  • 23 June – Jackie Swindells (72), English striker
  • 24 June – Mario Tontodonati (85), Italian midfielder/forward

July[]

  • 2 July – Kaj Hansen (68), Swedish defender, participated in the 1964 European Nations' Cup
  • 3 July – Sadek Boukhalfa (74), Algerian midfielder
  • 6 July – Mihai Baicu (33), Romanian midfielder, cardiac arrest
  • 12 July – Tommy Cummings (80), English midfielder and manager
  • 13 July – Axel Pilmark (83), Danish midfielder, participated in the 1948 Summer Olympics
  • 14 July – Kujtim Majaci (47), Albanian forward
  • 17 July – (88), Danish midfielder
  • 20 July – (18), Armenian forward
  • 21 July – Dai Lawrence (62), Welsh defender
  • 24 July – Zé Carlos (47), Brazilian goalkeeper
  • 25 July – Ricardo Bonelli (76), Argentine midfielder
  • 25 July – (93), Italian defender
  • 25 July – Zequinha (74), Brazilian midfielder, on the squad for the 1962 FIFA World Cup
  • 29 July – Paul McGrillen (37), Scottish striker, suicide
  • 30 July – Yuri Kurnenin (55), Belarusian midfielder and manager
  • 31 July – Sir Bobby Robson (76), English forward and manager

August[]

  • 2 August – Joe Livingstone (67), English striker
  • 5 August – (73), Italian defender and manager
  • 8 August – Daniel Jarque (26), Spanish defender, heart attack
  • 8 August – (72), Italian forward
  • 9 August – Tommy Clinton (83), Irish defender
  • 9 August – (41), Italian defender
  • 10 August – Francisco Valdés (66), Chilean midfielder
  • 11 August – Lazare Gianessi (83), French defender, participated in the 1954 FIFA World Cup
  • 11 August – Jan Sillo, (32) South African footballer
  • 13 August – Brian McLaughlin (54), Scottish midfielder
  • 19 August – Vic Snell (81), English defender
  • 19 August – Bobby Thomson (65), English defender and manager
  • 24 August – Virginio De Paoli (71), Italian striker
  • 31 August – Torsten Lindberg (92), Swedish goalkeeper and manager, participated in the 1948 Summer Olympics and 1950 FIFA World Cup

September[]

  • 1 September – Jock Buchanan (74), Scottish forward
  • 7 September – Norman Curtis, (84), English footballer
  • 9 September – Léon Glovacki (81), French striker and manager, participated in the 1954 FIFA World Cup
  • 11 September – (56), Italian midfielder
  • 11 September – (65), French midfielder
  • 11 September – Henny van Schoonhoven (39), Dutch defender, cancer
  • 13 September – Paul Shirtliff (46), English defender
  • 19 September – Stevie Gray (42), English footballer
  • 19 September – Brian Filipi (20), Albanian midfielder, traffic accident
  • 20 September – Hernan Córdoba, (19) Colombian footballer
  • 20 September – (23), Colombian midfielder, traffic accident
  • 20 September – Hernan Córdoba (19), Colombian striker, traffic accident
  • 22 September – Marco Achilli (60), Italian midfielder
  • 23 September – Dennis Pacey, (80), English footballer
  • 24 September – Terry Bly (73), English striker and manager
  • 26 September – Geoff Barrowcliffe (77), English defender
  • 27 September – René Bliard (76), French striker
  • 27 September – Raúl Savoy (68), Argentine midfielder
  • 28 September – (52), German forward
  • 28 September – Best Ogedegbe, (55), Nigerian footballer
  • 30 September – Raúl Magaña (69), Salvadoran goalkeeper and manager

October[]

  • 1 October – (60), Ivorian defender, father of Djibril Cissé
  • 2 October – Rolf Rüssmann (58), German defender, participated in the 1978 FIFA World Cup
  • 3 October – Zoran Mijucić (40), Serbian midfielder, participated in the 1987 FIFA World Youth Championship
  • 4 October – Gerhard Kaufhold (80), German midfielder/striker
  • 5 October – Tommy Capel (87), English forward
  • 8 October – Alex McCrae (89), Scottish forward
  • 9 October – Arne Bakker (79), Norwegian midfielder
  • 9 October – Horst Szymaniak (75), German midfielder, participated in the 1958 FIFA World Cup and the 1962 FIFA World Cup
  • 11 October – Gustav Kral (26), Austrian goalkeeper, traffic accident
  • 12 October – (56), Italian goalkeeper
  • 12 October – Stan Palk, (87), English footballer
  • 13 October – Orane Simpson (26), Jamaican midfielder, stabbing
  • 15 October – Heinz Versteeg, (70), Dutch footballer
  • 17 October – David Burnside (69), English midfielder and manager
  • 21 October – John Jarman (78), Welsh midfielder
  • 22 October – Ray Lambert, (87) Welsh footballer
  • 22 October – Albert Watson, (91) English footballer
  • 23 October – Collins Mbulo (38), Zambian goalkeeper
  • 27 October – Frank Brady, Jr. (age unknown), Irish midfielder
  • 30 October – Juvenal, Brazilian defender, runner-up at the 1950 FIFA World Cup. (85)
  • 30 October – František Veselý (65), Czech forward, participated in the 1970 FIFA World Cup and the UEFA Euro 1976

November[]

  • 2 November – Keith Kettleborough (74), English midfielder
  • 2 November – (44), Italian midfielder
  • 3 November – Archie Baird, (90), Scottish footballer
  • 4 November – Stefano Chiodi (52), Italian midfielder
  • 7 November – Billy Ingham (57), English midfielder
  • 10 November – Robert Enke (32), German goalkeeper, suicide
  • 12 November – Willy Kernen, (80), Swiss footballer
  • 13 November – Héctor Facundo (72), Argentine midfielder, participated in the 1962 FIFA World Cup
  • 15 November – Ray Charnley (74), English forward
  • 15 November – Don Martin (65), English forward
  • 16 November – Antonio de Nigris (31), Mexican striker, heart attack
  • 18 November – Salem Saad (31), Emirati striker, heart attack
  • 19 November – Frank Beattie (76), Scottish footballer
  • 22 November – Juan Carlos Muñoz (90), Argentine midfielder
  • 23 November – Tony Parry (64), English defender
  • 25 November – Mike Tiddy (80), English midfielder
  • 26 November – Giuseppe Baldini (87), Italian striker and manager
  • 26 November – Nikola Kovachev, (75), Bulgarian footballer
  • 29 November – George Cummins (78), Irish forward
  • 30 November – Christoph Budde (46), German striker

December[]

  • December – (85), Swedish goalkeeper
  • 1 December – Neil Dougall (88), Scottish midfielder and manager
  • 1 December – Alberto Martínez (59), Uruguayan midfielder
  • 1 December – Christoph Budde, German footballer (46)
  • 12 December – Manuel Ruiz Sosa (72), Spanish midfielder and manager
  • 13 December – Wilton Cezar Xavier (62) Brazilian footballer
  • 14 December – Alan A'Court (75), English midfielder and manager, participated in the 1958 FIFA World Cup
  • 16 December – Dennis Herod, (86) English footballer
  • 17 December – Michel Leblond (77), French midfielder and manager, on the squad for the 1954 FIFA World Cup
  • 17 December – (69), Mexican midfielder, on the squad for the 1962 FIFA World Cup
  • 17 December – Miljenko Mihić, (75) Serbian football coach
  • 20 December – Jack Brownsword (86), English defender
  • 22 December – Albert Scanlon (74), English forward, survivor of the Munich air disaster
  • 24 December – Hugo Berly (67), Chilean defender, on the squad for the 1966 FIFA World Cup
  • 26 December – Giuseppe Chiappella (85), Italian midfielder and manager
  • 27 December – Takashi Takabayashi, (78), Japan footballer
  • 28 December – Allen Batsford (77), English football manager

References[]

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